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14

March 2 • 2017

jn

hidden from view, Michigan State Reps. Jeremy Moss and
Robert Wittenberg joined us with an update of legislation and
issues that face the inner-ring suburbs.
For the second world, water, we eat fruits with thin skins
that contain an indigestible pit that remind us not to con-
sume everything that seems good on the surface — under the
surface there are also obstacles. We were joined by Monica
Lewis-Patrick, co-founder of We the People of Detroit. Lewis-
Patrick is a dedicated activist helping
low-income families and the elderly
from Detroit to Flint gain access to clean
water. She reminded us that 20 percent
of the world’s fresh water is right here;
yet our neighbors go without, and she
called for recommitment to equitable
distribution of fresh, clean water.
Detroit has some of the highest levels
of asthma in the country, and Dr. Abdul
El-Sayid, executive director of Detroit’s
health department (who just announced
his candidacy for governor), shared that
for Muslims, as for Jews, the word “to
breathe” means spirit or soul. He spoke
movingly about the necessity to work
together to make sure that people sepa-
rated by only 30 minutes by car should all
be able to breathe without becoming ill.
This is the third world, where all can be
good; and we eat fruits whole, like berries.
Rose Basch, 13, of Ann Arbor offers
In the fourth world, the world of spirit
some of the bounty.
or fire, we’re beyond the material, and
we sip maple syrup or whiskey (thanks
Detroit City Distillery!). Jackson Koeppel, executive director of
Soulardarity, creates street lights powered by the sun for com-
munities like Highland Park. He reminded us that power can
indeed be in our own hands.
Throughout the evening, Rabbi Aura Ahuvia and Rabbi Dan
Horowitz sang niggunim, traditional Jewish wordless melodies,
to lead the nearly 80 attendees through the seder. Partnering
organizations read poetry and led in the blessings.
This evening of prayer, song, poetry, art and activism brought
people together across differences of denomination and age,
race and class, suburb and city as a community. As the late
Rabbi Zalman Schachter-Shalomi used to say, “The only way
we’re going to get it together, is together.” •

